The Islamic State threat went live on pastebin 15 hours ago, and calls on jihadists across the world to rally in a fight against Twitter. Pastebin is an anonymous online site favoured by coders. The page basically declares war on Twitter.

The post is written in Arabic, though Google translate (not entirely accurate) paints a basic picture of what it says. One extract reads: “Jack helpless when their necks officially become a target for the soldiers of the Caliphate and supporters scattered among your midst.” The word Caliphate has both religious and political connotations and describes a strict Muslim government led by a Caliph, a successor to the prophet Muhammed.

Later in the post, the writer talks about a “media war” and says that by stopping ISIS and its supporters from tweeting their messages, employees are “preventing the delivery of the holy mission to the world.” At the time of writing, Dorsey’s Twitter feed suggests he’s not acknowledged the attack.

NBC News writes that Twitter is working with law enforcement to investigate whether the attack on Dorsey, and Twitter as a whole, is real. Twitter told the news site yesterday:”Our security team is investigating the veracity of these threats with relevant law enforcement officials.”

It’s not the first time Twitter employees have been threatened by ISIS. CEO Dick Costolo has said in the past that the militants have spoken out about being prevented from spreading their jihadist movement online. Costolo has talked about “balancing free speech and open speech with wider concerns.”

Business Insider has contacted Dorsey/Twitter for comment and will update this post if/when we get a response.

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